revivalist造句1. Booth was a revivalist intent on his Christian vocation.
2. By 1742 even Yale students embarked on revivalist journeys.
3. Colonists had never seen anything before like the revivalist outbreaks that swept the country in the early eighteenth century.
4. The most visible signs of a growing revivalist spirit appeared in the ministry of James McGready in Kentucky.
5. In the dreary new settlements revivalist contests also provided entertainment.
6. They attended a revivalist meeting and became born-again Christians.
7. Revivalist Islamic groups are amongst the most deadly.
8. In parallel, revivalist and Pentecostal churches have proliferated in many parts of Africa, offering spiritual stability in times of uncertainty.
9. Writer Anita Brechbill observed in God' s Revivalist magazine that "Most often the Word of the Lord comes to a soul in the ordinary duties of life."
10. Yet another competitor is an Islamic revivalist movement, Tablighi Jamaat, rooted in south Asia but active in Africa and Europe, especially Britain.
11. Thank you. Mr. revivalist. I'll hit always the message and obtain back to you se soon for feasible.
12. These days, the major platform for revivalist Islam is no longer the madrasa but the web, an area in which Mariam was a specialist and through which she may have been pursuing a secret life.
13. Khan lost his seat in the 1991 elections, when a Hindu revivalist wave swept his constituency.
14. A new voice has interrupted and is howling slogans like a revivalist preacher.
15. In colonial days the Presbyterians had mastered the competitive revivalist styles; now they carried their learned ministry to the West.
16. Li stood before the students, his right arm raised in the manner of a tent revivalist, and launched them into English at the top of their lungs.
17. The religion Smith founded originated amid the great fervour of competing Christian revivalist movements in early 19th-century America but departed from them in its proclamation of a new dispensation.
18. It was closely associated with the work of Charles Finney, America's most famous antebellum revivalist, and with the faculty at Oberlin College, Ohio (founded 1833), of which Finney was a part.